Tuesday 31 December 2013

Abuse of Discretion

A failure to take into proper consideration the facts and law relating to a particular matter; an Arbitrary or unreasonable departure from precedent and settled judicial custom.
Where a trial court must exercise discretion in deciding a question, it must do so in a way that is not clearly against logic and the evidence. An improvident exercise of discretion is an error of law and grounds for reversing a decision on appeal. It does not, however, necessarily amount to bad faith, intentional wrong, or misconduct by the trial judge.
For example, the traditional standard of appellate review for evidence-related questions arising during trial is the "abuse of discretion" standard. Most judicial determinations are made based on evidence introduced at legal proceedings. Evidence may consist of oral testimony, written testimony, videotapes and sound recordings, documentary evidence such as exhibits and business records, and a host of other materials, including voice exemplars, handwriting samples, and blood tests.
Before such materials may be introduced into the record at a legal proceeding, the trial court must determine that they satisfy certain criteria governing the admissibility of evidence. At a minimum, the court must find that the evidence offered is relevant to the legal proceedings. Evidence that bears on a factual or legal issue at stake in a controversy is considered relevant evidence.
The relevancy of evidence is typically measured by its probative value. Evidence is generally deemed Probative if it has a tendency to make the existence of any material fact more or less probable. Evidence that a murder defendant ate spaghetti on the day of the murder might be relevant at trial if spaghetti sauce was found at the murder scene. Otherwise such evidence would probably be deemed irrelevant and could be excluded from trial if opposing counsel made the proper objection.
During many civil and criminal trials, judges rule on hundreds of evidentiary objections lodged by both parties. These rulings are normally snap judgments made in the heat of battle. Courts must make these decisions quickly to keep the proceedings moving on schedule. For this reason, judges are given wide latitude in making evidentiary rulings and will not be over-turned on appeal unless the appellate court finds that the trial judge abused his or her discretion.
For example, in a Negligence case, a state appellate court ruled that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by admitting into evidence a posed accident-scene photograph, even though the photograph depicted a model pedestrian blindly walking into the path of the driver's vehicle with the pedestrian's head pointed straight ahead as if she was totally oblivious to the vehicle and other traffic. Gorman v. Hunt, 19 S.W.3d 662 (Ky. 2000). In upholding the trial court's decision to admit the evidence, the appellate court observed that the photograph was only used to show the pedestrian's position relative to the vehicle at the time of impact and not to blame the pedestrian for being negligent. The appellate court also noted that the lawyer objecting to the photograph's admissibility was free to remind the jury of its limited relevance during cross-examination and closing arguments.
An appellate court would find that a trial court abused its discretion, however, if it admitted into evidence a photograph without proof that it was authentic. Apter v. Ross, 781 N.E.2d 744 (Ind.App. 2003). A photograph's authenticity may be established by a witness's personal observations that the photograph accurately depicts what it purports to depict at the time the photograph was taken. Ordinarily the photographer who took the picture is in the best position to provide such testimony.

Further readings

Cohen, Ruth Bryna. 2000."Superior Court Affirms Non Pros for Failure to Subpoena Own Witness; Trial Court Did not Abuse Discretion in Its Application of Civil Procedure Rule 216." Pennsylvania Law Weekly (October 9).
Hamblett, Mark. 2001. "Circuit Panel Issues Recusal Guidelines; Says Rakoff Acted Properly In Not Stepping Down." New York Law Journal (February 26).
Riccardi, Michael A. 2002."Polygraph Evidence OK to Prove Probable Cause, Circuit Judges Say; No Abuse of Discretion in Relying on 'Lie Detector' for Limited Purpose." Pennsylvania Law Weekly (April 29).

Cross-references

West's Encyclopedia of American Law, edition 2. Copyright 2008 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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Saturday 28 December 2013

Reply to the Australian Government Solicitors



To
David Nguyen
Australian Government Solicitors
MLC Cente
Martin Place 2000

Dear Mr Nguyen
I respond to your letter dated 17th December 2013 where you intend to set my subpoena aside once again.
As I believe you must be of some intelligence I would recommend that you read the statements provided to the Australian Federal Police by Veronique Ingram , Adam Toma, Mathew Osborne Mark Findlay and Cheryl Cullen and you may come to your own ( even if it is limited ) conclusion why AFSA wants this subpoena set aside. Therefore it is the intention of the Australian Government Solicitor and AFSA to protect systemic corrupt conduct and I understand you are again asking a court and magistrate to comply with your request.

You also may feel obliged to inform your "ÇLIENTS'' of the consequences of perjury and the requirements of the Australian Public Service Code of conduct..........................
and may also feel obliged to inform Veronique Ingram of her obligation as a Government Agency Head and the responsibility this carries.
You are also aware I am not obligated in informing you how I intend to use the documents I have subpoenaed to use in my defence however you are clearly aware it relates to the systemic failure of senior Management at AFSA.
Thank You
Fiona Brown

Saturday 7 December 2013

Gavin McCosker/ AFSA ITSA
Be aware this man is shonkey  at AFSA
Gavin McCosker

Gavin McCosker

Chief Operating Officer at Australian Financial Security Authority
Canberra Area, Australia
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Anyone wanting to testify against Veronique Ingram/ AFSA

If you have had difficulties with shonky Veronique Ingram Inspector General in Bankruptcy and  the systemic corrupt conduct this bitch is protecting at  the Australian Financial Security Authority or the old ITSA come and testify against  against her at the Downing Centre in Sydney...
Email me fionabrown01@hotmail.com if interested*****************

Friday 6 December 2013

 Complaints about AFSA/ ITSA/ Veronique Ingram / Matthew Osborne/ Mark Findlay
If you have  had problems with ITSA / AFSA and would like to have the matter heard before a magistrate in a court of Law please contact me
fionabrown01@hotmail.com
and have your say in court.
This matter is to expose systemic corrupt conduct and corruption!!!!
Particularly if you   have had dealings with any of the following.....
Veronique Ingram, shonkey Inspector General in Bankruptcy
Adam Toma EX corrupt National Enforcement Manager
Matthew Osborne principal Legal Officer providing corrupt legal Advice to Trustees
Mark Findlay 
Gavin McCosker
Cheryl Cullen
Florence Choo 
Guilia Inga
Also anyone who has experience difficulty with Tibor Karolyi who originally worked for ITSA/ AFSA and now works for  de Vries Tayeh

Thursday 5 December 2013

The Heiner Affair/ Whistle-blower

Posted by: Gina Baker | 5 December, 2013 - 12:23 PM
Heiner Affair aka shreddergate still in the news after 18 years 4BC Mornings: Kevin Lindeberg is an ex Trade Union official. Twenty threre years ago he was involved in calling to account  members of the former Goss Government over the illegal shredding of documents relating to child abuse.
He joins Greg Cary to discuss the case then and now. Kevin is not satified that justice has been done and calls for a parliamentary Commission of Inquiry.

The Heiner Affair is the running sore of the Queensland justice system, - It is a chronic "cover up" having the dimensions of Nixon's "Watergate."
The ALP being a party top heavy with lawyers and barristers is totally aware of how Goss and Beattie have misrepresented sect129 of the Criminal code when it suits them.
Are ALL people equal before the law, - or are some people more equal than others???
It is way past time that the Augean Stables of Heiner were cleansed.
Les T. Kelly, Launceston, Tas.
Les T. Kelly Friday 6 December, 2013 - 9:36 AM 
WHISTLEBLOWER KEVIN LINDEBERG’S 8 AUGUST 2013 COMMENTARY RE POST-CARMODY INQUIRY’S 1 JULY 2013 FINDING OF PRIMA FACIE BREACH OF SECTION 129 OF THE CRIMINAL CODE RE SHREDDING OF THE HEINER INQUIRY DOCUMENTS AND TAPES

Whistleblower Kevin Lindeberg – Former public sector trade union organiser
Whistleblower Kevin Lindeberg – Former public sector trade union organiser
Q: ARE YOU SAYING THAT COMMISSIONER CARMODY’S NARROW DEFINITION OF ‘GOVERNMENT’ EVENTUALLY CAUGHT UP WITH HIM IN TERMS OF HIS FINDING OF A PRIMA FACIE CRIME BY THE LAW NOT BEING ABLE TO BE FULLY APPLIED?
KL: That’s correct. He said at the Recusal Hearing that if he defined the term “government” to mean “whole of government”, that is, departments and statutory authorities, then he would have to stand aside because it would logically mean that he’d have to investigate himself when he was the Queensland Crime Commissioner in 2001 when I saw him about the Harding Incident. He accepted that the law does not permit a party to an allegation to investigate himself.
In other words, after setting the parameters, he couldn’t apply the full scope of section 7 to the prima face shredding crime without breaching his own narrow definition of “government” to just mean “the political executive” because once the floodgates opened, it flooded everywhere and everything.
The Rofe QC Audit, to all intents and purposes, is the systemic cover-up flooding roadmap. Full commentary and interview here >>>>>

6  MAY  2013 - A  DAY  TO  REMEMBER

Commissioner Tim Carmody
Commissioner Tim Carmody
Some days are just like any other but some may be pivotal in the lives of individuals, for particular issues or nations because of what transpires. This can be judged either instantaneously, prospectively or retrospectively.
On 6 May 2013, in Court 17 of the Brisbane Magistrates Court Building, never before heard arguments as to whether an entire Cabinet may be in serious breach of the Criminal Code were live-streamed to the world on the internet.  Specifically, they addressed the extraordinary legal question as to whether the 5 March 1990 order by the Queensland Cabinet to destroy the Heiner Inquiry documents and tapes to, inter alia, reduce the risk of legal action may have been illegal.
Despite it being nearly a quarter of a century since this shredding order, its legal consequences remain alive because no statute of limitations applies.
Presiding over the arguments was Commissioner Tim Carmody SC, head of the Child Protection Commission of Inquiry. Full commentary here >>>>>

2012 SPECIAL COMMENTARY BY WHISTLEBLOWER KEVIN LINDEBERG

Whistleblower Kevin Lindeberg
Whistleblower Kevin Lindeberg

Over a long period this webpage has independently drawn together all material available on the public record which goes to making up what is now commonly known across Australia and around the world as “the Heiner Affair.”  The whistleblower, Kevin Lindeberg, is not responsible for its content although it contains most of what he has written about his public interest disclosures. He has never directly made a comment on this webpage.
However, due to recent dramatic events, he was approached with a series of relevant questions, and his response is now published here.>>>>> MOVING TOWARDS THE ENDGAME

Witness confirms pack rape of girl to Heiner Inquiry

John Oxley Youth Detention Centre
John Oxley Youth Detention Centre. Picture: Philip Norrish
Today at the Carmody Inquiry, the Rubicon on the Heiner Affair was irretrievable crossed.
A highly credible witness under oath, Mrs Irene Parfitt, former Youth Worker at the John Oxley Youth Detention Centre, confirmed the contents of her police statement that she told Mr Heiner about the pack rape of Annette Harding when she gave evidence to him in Brisbane Children's Court at North Quay.
She was, in effect, a whistleblower. She would not tolerate silence any longer over a burning issue at the Centre for many staff, and she believed the Heiner Inquiry was the place to make her public interest disclosure.  The assault was a matter which greatly disturbed her. Notwithstanding some time difficulties expected after the passage of close to 23 years, she clearly recalled telling Mr Heiner about the sexual assault of Ms Harding, a 14-year-old indigenous child while in the care of the State.
Full commentary here >>>>>

Should Commissioner Carmody Have Recused Himself from the QCPCI?

Alleged Prima Facie Criminal Count 57 of the Rofe Audit.

Commissioner Tim Carmody
Commissioner Tim Carmody
Section 87 of the Criminal Code - Official Corruption in regard to the conduct of certain officials of the Queensland Crime Commission in respect of their handling of the allegations by one Kevin Lindeberg and related matters at certain times-
That on divers dates between the thirteenth day of December 2001 and the thirty first day of December 2001, at Brisbane in the state of Queensland, one Timothy Carmody, to the extent of his involvement, being a holder of office in the Queensland Crime Commission, pursuant to the Crime Commission Act 1997, at material times, did corruptly confer an advantage on another in respect the handling of allegations by one Kevin Lindeberg by failing to act honestly, impartially and in the public interest.
You be the judge full account of Count 57 of the Rofe Audit here >>>>>


Queensland Parliamentry Crime and Misconduct Committee

Other heiner affair commentary.

Downloads

MP3/Video Interviews

Radio 4BC
Radio 4BC 01/10/2009
Radio 4BC 09/07/2010
Radio 2GB 30/09/2009
Radio 2GB 29/09/2009
Radio 2GB 24/06/2009
Radio 2GB 23/06/2009 Video
ABC Radio Richard Fidler Conversation Hour 17/03/2009
Brisbane radio 4BC 20/03/2009
Alan Jones radio interview with Piers Akerman.
Alan Jones radio interview with Peter Beattie
Alan Jones radio interview with former QLD union official Kevin Lindeberg

Download PDF Documents

Crime in the Community

Forde Commission of Inquiry

Inquiry into Harmonising Legal Systems

Tasmanian Parliament Joint Select Committee on Ethical Conduct

Standing Committee Legal & Constitutional Affairs

Independent Monthly

 

Wednesday 4 December 2013

Search Warrants/ when search warrants can be issued


Commonwealth Consolidated Acts

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CRIMES ACT 1914 - SECT 3E

When search warrants can be issued
             (1)  An issuing officer may issue a warrant to search premises if the officer is satisfied, by information on oath or affirmation, that there are reasonable grounds for suspecting that there is, or there will be within the next 72 hours, any evidential material at the premises.
             (2)  An issuing officer may issue a warrant authorising an ordinary search or a frisk search of a person if the officer is satisfied, by information on oath or affirmation, that there are reasonable grounds for suspecting that the person has in his or her possession, or will within the next 72 hours have in his or her possession, any evidential material.
             (3)  If the person applying for the warrant suspects that, in executing the warrant, it will be necessary to use firearms, the person must state that suspicion, and the grounds for that suspicion, in the information.
             (4)  If the person applying for the warrant is a member or special member of the Australian Federal Police and has, at any time previously, applied for a warrant relating to the same person or premises the person must state particulars of those applications and their outcome in the information.
             (5)  If an issuing officer issues a warrant, the officer is to state in the warrant:
                     (a)  the offence to which the warrant relates; and
                     (b)  a description of the premises to which the warrant relates or the name or description of the person to whom it relates; and
                     (c)  the kinds of evidential material that are to be searched for under the warrant; and
                     (d)  the name of the constable who, unless he or she inserts the name of another constable in the warrant, is to be responsible for executing the warrant; and
                     (e)  the time at which the warrant expires (see subsection (5A)); and
                      (f)  whether the warrant may be executed at any time or only during particular hours.
          (5A)  The time stated in the warrant under paragraph 3E(5)(e) as the time at which the warrant expires must be a time that is not later than the end of the seventh day after the day on which the warrant is issued.
Example:    If a warrant is issued at 3 pm on a Monday, the expiry time specified must not be later than midnight on Monday in the following week.
             (6)  The issuing officer is also to state, in a warrant in relation to premises:
                     (a)  that the warrant authorises the seizure of a thing (other than evidential material of the kind referred to in paragraph (5)(c)) found at the premises in the course of the search that the executing officer or a constable assisting believes on reasonable grounds to be:
                              (i)  evidential material in relation to an offence to which the warrant relates; or
                             (ii)  a thing relevant to another offence that is an indictable offence; or
                            (iii)  evidential material (within the meaning of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 ) or tainted property (within the meaning of that Act);
                            if the executing officer or a constable assisting believes on reasonable grounds that seizure of the thing is necessary to prevent its concealment, loss or destruction or its use in committing an offence; and
                     (b)  whether the warrant authorises an ordinary search or a frisk search of a person who is at or near the premises when the warrant is executed if the executing officer or a constable assisting suspects on reasonable grounds that the person has any evidential material or seizable items in his or her possession.
             (7)  The issuing officer is also to state, in a warrant in relation to a person:
                     (a)  that the warrant authorises the seizure of a thing (other than evidential material of the kind referred to in paragraph (5)(c)) found, in the course of the search, on or in the possession of the person or in a recently used conveyance, being a thing that the executing officer or a constable assisting believes on reasonable grounds to be:
                              (i)  evidential material in relation to an offence to which the warrant relates; or
                             (ii)  a thing relevant to another offence that is an indictable offence; or
                            (iii)  evidential material (within the meaning of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 ) or tainted property (within the meaning of that Act);
                            if the executing officer or a constable assisting believes on reasonable grounds that seizure of the thing is necessary to prevent its concealment, loss or destruction or its use in committing an offence; and
                     (b)  the kind of search of a person that the warrant authorises.
             (8)  Paragraph (5)(e) and subsection (5A) do not prevent the issue of successive warrants in relation to the same premises or person.
             (9)  If the application for the warrant is made under section 3R, this section (other than subsection (5A)) applies as if:
                     (a)  subsections (1) and (2) referred to 48 hours rather than 72 hours; and
                     (b)  paragraph (5)(e) required the issuing officer to state in the warrant the period for which the warrant is to remain in force, which must not be more than 48 hours.
           (10)  An issuing officer in New South Wales or the Australian Capital Territory may issue a warrant in relation to premises or a person in the Jervis Bay Territory.
           (11)  An issuing officer in a State or internal Territory may:
                     (a)  issue a warrant in relation to premises or a person in that State or Territory; or
                     (b)  issue a warrant in relation to premises or a person in an external Territory; or
                     (c)  issue a warrant in relation to premises or a person in another State or internal Territory (including the Jervis Bay Territory) if he or she is satisfied that there are special circumstances that make the issue of the warrant appropriate; or
                     (d)  issue a warrant in relation to a person wherever the person is in Australia or in an external Territory if he or she is satisfied that it is not possible to predict where the person may be.


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Tuesday 3 December 2013

Veronique Ingram , Adam Toma, Mark Findlay Matthew Osborne, Adam Toma Gavin McCosker/ Cheryl Cullen ITSA/ AFSA

Anyone who wishes to give evidence against any of the shonky senior Management of ITSA/ AFSA   named above please contact me.
 The trial will go ahead   sometime next year and I have asked the magistrate for 3 to 4 week with all of the above lining up to be cross examined.
If this shonky Government Agency has fucked you over  have your say and give evidence in court.
Although Senator Williams has a half hearted attempt at ITSA/ AFSA it clearly appears that it will be left to me to expose  systemic Corrupt conduct in this Government Department.
Contact me fionabrown01@hotmail.com and get in the list to expose them!!!!!!!!!!!!!....
Should be great entertainment for those  who enjoy seeing shonky Public Servants  squirm........................
 and what will become of the Corrupt Adam Toma who was National Manager Enforcement ITSA and slipped out the back door and thought he was going to make a fresh start at Victoria Commission Gaming and Liquor Regulation....... this is a message for you...... you can run but you can't hide from me......... see you in Court!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Veronique Ingram , Adam Toma, Mark Findlay Matthew Osborne, Adam Toma Gavin McCosker/ Cheryl Cullen ITSA/ AFSA

Anyone who wishes to give evidence against any of the shonky senior Management of ITSA/ AFSA   named above please contact me.
 The trial will go ahead   sometime next year and I have asked the magistrate for 3 to 4 week with all of the above lining up to be cross examined.
If this shonky Government Agency has fucked you over  have your say and give evidence in court.
Although Senator Williams has a half hearted attempt at ITSA/ AFSA it clearly appears that it will be left to me to expose  systemic Corrupt conduct in this Government Department.
Contact me fionabrown01@hotmail.com and get in the list to expose them!!!!!!!!!!!!!....
Should be great entertainment for those  who enjoy seeing shonky Public Servants ........................
 and what will become of the Corrupt Adam Toma who was National Manager Enforcement ITSA and slipped out the back door and thought he was going to make a fresh start at Victoria Commission Gaming and Liquor Regulation....... this is a message for you...... you can run but you can't hide from me......... see you in Court!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Thursday 28 November 2013

Jane Brockington CEO VCGLR/ Adam Toma/ Veronique Ingram

 In light of systemic corrupt conduct and corruption in Government Departments and the responsibility of Agency Heads and CEO'S of Government Departments there is a responsibility to adaquately investigate these complaints.
At the Insolvency Trustee Service Australia or now called Australia Financial Security Service Australia the Inspector General Veronique Ingram failed in everyway to put a halt to these practices.
Clearly this  Commonwealth Department would not have been able to function without these corrupt practices.
The shonky Principal Legal Officer  Matthew Osborne is advising the Official Trustee and Private trustees  and giving corrupt Legal advice.
Complaints made to Bankruptcy Regulations are also  being fucked over because of this Legal Advice.
 The Commonwealth Ombudsman and the Australian Public Service Commission are also protecting the systemic  corrupt conduct and corruption at AFSA or ITSA.
So what was the conversation Jane Brockinton CEO VCGLR had with the corrupt Adam Toma when he first came to work at the VCGLR from AFSA?
It appears we will all find out in my court case when Adam Toma is cross examined!!!!
 


Monday 25 November 2013

             (1)  A fault element for a particular physical element may be intention, knowledge, recklessness or negligence.
             (2)  Subsection (1) does not prevent a law that creates a particular offence from specifying other fault elements for a physical element of that offence.
             (1)  A person has intention with respect to conduct if he or she means to engage in that conduct.
             (2)  A person has intention with respect to a circumstance if he or she believes that it exists or will exist.
             (3)  A person has intention with respect to a result if he or she means to bring it about or is aware that it will occur in the ordinary course of events.
                   A person has knowledge of a circumstance or a result if he or she is aware that it exists or will exist in the ordinary course of events.
             (1)  A person is reckless with respect to a circumstance if:
                     (a)  he or she is aware of a substantial risk that the circumstance exists or will exist; and
                     (b)  having regard to the circumstances known to him or her, it is unjustifiable to take the risk.
             (2)  A person is reckless with respect to a result if:
                     (a)  he or she is aware of a substantial risk that the result will occur; and
                     (b)  having regard to the circumstances known to him or her, it is unjustifiable to take the risk.
             (3)  The question whether taking a risk is unjustifiable is one of fact.
             (4)  If recklessness is  a fault element for a physical element of an offence, proof of intention, knowledge or recklessness will satisfy that fault element.
                   A person is negligent with respect to a physical element of an offence if his or her conduct involves:
                     (a)  such a great falling short of the standard of care that a reasonable person would exercise in the circumstances; and
                     (b)  such a high risk that the physical element exists or will exist;
that the conduct merits criminal punishment for the offence.
             (1)  If the law creating the offence does not specify a fault element for a physical element that consists only of conduct, intention is the fault element for that physical element.
             (2)  If the law creating the offence does not specify a fault element for a physical element that consists of a circumstance or a result, recklessness is the fault element for that physical element.
Note:          Under subsection 5.4(4), recklessness can be established by proving intention, knowledge or recklessness.

Friday 8 November 2013

Edward Snowden/ British Spy Agencies

Australia must give a big cheer to the whistle-blower Ed Snowden  for his hand  in outing  3 top British spies!!!!!!!!
 Clearly we all have to laugh at the comments  that Mr Snowden has   caused such KAOS and  given a gift to Al-Qaeda 

 Clearly Brtitian  and the United states have failed to learn any lessons that many of the so called " Terrorist" attacks  are retaliation for attrocities carried out in the name of the Amercian or British Governments.
It is also clearly evident that  the life of a person from the Middle East , Pakistan, Afghanistan is worth considerably less than  the lives of  people in  countries that believe they actually rule the world!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
So where is MAXWELL SMART when you need him????????????? 

 
London:  Britain's top spy chiefs said in a rare televised appearance Thursday that the intelligence leaks by Edward Snowden have left its enemies "rubbing their hands with glee" and caused terror groups to change the way they communicate.

The heads of foreign spy agency MI6, its domestic counterpart MI5 and electronic eavesdropping agency GCHQ also denied in their evidence to parliament's Intelligence and Security Committee that Britons were subject to mass surveillance.

In a hearing held under tight security and with a two-minute time delay to prevent accidental disclosures, MI6 boss John Sawers said Snowden's revelations of mass US and British surveillance programmes were a gift to Al-Qaeda and other terrorists.

"The leaks from Snowden have been very damaging, they put our operations at risk. Our adversaries are rubbing their hands with glee. Al-Qaeda is lapping it up," Sawers told the committee.

GCHQ boss Iain Lobban added that the revelations by the fugitive US leaker had led "terrorist groups" in the Middle East, Afghanistan and elsewhere to modify the way they communicate.

"We have intelligence on (and) we have actually seen chat around specific terrorist groups, including closer to home, discussing how to avoid what they now perceive to be vulnerable communications methods," Lobban said.

Snowden, a former US National Security Agency (NSA) contractor who has been granted temporary asylum in Russia, has revealed massive US electronic surveillance programmes in recent months, sending shockwaves around the world.

The leaks have strained Washington's ties with its allies over suggestions that it has eavesdropped on dozens of world leaders, including by tapping the mobile phone of German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

Thursday's hearing marked an unprecedented joint public appearance for the heads of the three British intelligence agencies, who could be seen on television sitting in a row as they answered questions from lawmakers.

They insisted that they worked hard to balance national security with citizens' right to privacy.

"We do not spend our time listening to the telephone calls or reading the emails of the majority. It would not be proportionate, it would not be legal. We do not do it," Lobban told the committee.

Spying activity 'proportionate to threats'

MI5 director general Andrew Parker insisted that the work of the intelligence services was a "proportionate" response to the terrorist threats faced by Britain.

"The suggestion that what we do is somehow compromising freedom and democracy -- of course we believe the opposite is the case," Parker told the committee.


"The work we do is proportionate judged against the necessity of protecting against these threats."

Sawers emphatically denied that British agents used torture as a means of countering threats to national security.

"We're absolutely clear we only operate within the framework of the law," he told the committee.

"Would we pursue a situation that we knew would lead to mistreatment or torture of an individual to get terrorist threat intelligence? The answer is absolutely not.

"We do not participate in, incite, encourage or condone mistreatment or torture, and that is absolute."

Britain's security services operate under "very strong ethical standards", he said.

The MI6 boss identified "al-Qaeda and its many, many branches" as the biggest threat to British security.

"There are also states out there that are trying to do us harm, through cyber-attacks, by acquiring nuclear weapons or involved in generating instability in parts of the world important to us," he added.

The televised proceedings were subject to a delay to prevent any information that compromised national security from being accidentally broadcast, committee chairman Malcolm Rifkind said.

The three spymasters have until now given evidence to the committee in private because of the sensitive nature of their work.

GCHQ has faced questions in recent weeks because Snowden's leaks have suggested close collaboration between the British listening post and its US counterpart, the NSA, to harvest vast quantities of data from ordinary citizens' communications.

Britain has faced questions from Berlin this week following a media report that London has been operating a secret listening post from its Berlin embassy.

The German government called in Britain's ambassador for questioning over the report by Britain's Independent newspaper, which was said to be based in part on leaked documents from Snowden.

Wednesday 6 November 2013

 David Harold Eastman inquiry

Networked Knowledge - Media Reports

[This edited version of the report has been prepared by Dr Robert N Moles]
Appeals and Reviews Homepage
A state of Injustice (2004) book online
Losing Their Grip - The Case of Henry Keogh (2006) book online
Forensic Investigations and Miscarriages of Justice (2010) book

On 10 August 2012 Louis Andrews of the Canberra Times reported “Fresh inquiry into Eastman murder conviction”.
David Harold Eastman will have a wide-ranging inquiry into his conviction for the 1989 murder of AFP Assistant Commissioner Colin Winchester. Justice Shane Marshall this morning said he was satisfied there was a fresh doubt or question about Eastman’s guilt. The judge said there was a significant risk that the conviction was unsafe because of the doubt. ACT Supreme Court Chief Justice Terence Higgins will now appoint a judge or magistrate to head the inquiry.
Outside the court Eastman’s counsel Terry O’Donnell welcomed the ruling. “This inquiry has been a very long time coming,” he said. “It is hoped that a broadly-based judicial inquiry will get to the truth behind the murder of Assistant Commissioner Colin Winchester. Mr Winchester was shot dead in the driveway of his Deakin home in January 1989.
In 1995 Eastman was convicted of his murder, and subsequently sentenced to life behind bars, but he has always maintained his innocence. Justice Marshall ruled the inquiry should go ahead after assistant Director of Public Prosecutions, John Lundy, said the director’s office didn’t oppose another review. Eastman’s legal team are relying on a 19-ground application, filed in court this morning. Their arguments are wide-ranging, covering questions about the conduct of the prosecution, misconduct by investigating police, the inadequacy of Eastman’s defence, the role of the trial judge and the prisoner’s mental state.
Eastman has had an inquiry before, but the focus was his fitness to plead. The broad scope of the fresh review makes it a significant development in a case which has captivated and divided the Canberra community for more than two decades. Earlier this year Eastman’s last hope for a fresh inquiry appeared to rest with Attorney-General Simon Corbell. Justice Marshall had ruled he had no power, under key provisions of the Crimes Act, to give the prisoner another bite at the inquiry cherry.
Last week a full bench of the ACT Supreme Court overturned his decision and ordered him to consider the application. The three judges said Justice Marshall's interpretation could bar innocent people exonerated by scientific advances from rightfully obtaining a fresh review. ''The consequences of the construction accepted by His Honour [Justice Marshall] would be that if, for example, advances in forensic medicine proved the innocence of the person convicted, no further inquiry could take place,'' they wrote.
This morning Justice Marshall made it clear he did not agree with their ruling. “I still think I’m right about the jurisdictional question by the way, and no-one’s taking that to the High Court, but one day maybe someone will have a look at that,” he said. And he launched a stinging rebuke towards Mr Corbell and the ACT Government Solicitor’s office, who supported the arguments of Eastman’s lawyers before the full court.
Solicitor-General Peter Garrisson, in his submissions, presented the arguments both for and against the judge’s ruling, acting as a “contradictor’’ to assist the court. But during the hearing the ACT government lawyers agreed Justice Marshall had misinterpreted the relevant section. The judge today said the Attorney-General “must not know what a contradictor means” and said the situation was an ‘’absolute disgrace”. He added it was “curious’’ the executive had the unfettered discretion to order a fresh inquiry. They have previously declined to do so.
The wording
The wording of Justice Marshall’s order for an inquiry came directly from the Crimes Act. He ordered “there be an inquiry into the conviction of the applicant for murder recorded on November 10, 1995”. He said there was a “doubt or question about whether the applicant was guilty of the offence”. Justice Marshall agreed there was a “significant risk that the conviction is unsafe because of the doubt”, and the doubt couldn’t be properly addressed in an appeal. “It is in the interests of justice that the doubt be considered in an inquiry,’’ the judge said.
Colin Winchester/ David Eastman/ Veronique Ingram/ Corruption

So was it  just a lucky shot that  David Harold Eastman killed the AFP    Colin Winchester or was it something more sinister like a professional hit?

It appears Harold Eastman was troubled with the conduct at Treasury.
Did the AFP set up Eastman up to protect something more sinister that was occurring in Treasury?
It is a fact that Veronique Ingram who is now Inspector General in Bankruptcy and protecting systemic corrupt conduct and corruption at  AFSA or ITSA worked in Treasury.
Is there some connection between what Eastman was complaining about and Veronique Ingram?
Veronique Ingram and Adam Toma  have currently asked Nuckhley Succar and Nathan Potter of the AFP to protect   systemic corrupt conduct  and corruption in her Government Department..
Is there a connection?
Did somebody ask the AFP to protect shonky conduct and silence Eastman this way?

Solicitor-General Peter Garrisson, in his submissions, presented the arguments both for and against the judge’s ruling, acting as a “contradictor’’ to assist the court. But during the hearing the ACT government lawyers agreed Justice Marshall had misinterpreted the relevant section. The judge today said the Attorney-General “must not know what a contradictor means” and said the situation was an ‘’absolute disgrace”. He added it was “curious’’ the executive had the unfettered discretion to order a fresh inquiry. They have previously declined to do so.
The wording
The wording of Justice Marshall’s order for an inquiry came directly from the Crimes Act. He ordered “there be an inquiry into the conviction of the applicant for murder recorded on November 10, 1995”. He said there was a “doubt or question about whether the applicant was guilty of the offence”. Justice Marshall agreed there was a “significant risk that the conviction is unsafe because of the doubt”, and the doubt couldn’t be properly addressed in an appeal. “It is in the interests of justice that the doubt be considered in an inquiry,’’ the judge said.

Monday 4 November 2013

Subpoena for documents/ AFSA/ ITSA

There is certainly a bright side to everything if you look for it!
For those who believe  in global warming and the gloom that Tim Flannery peddles it will be a comfort for New Zealander's to find the winters will be not so harsh and there will be a longer season for growing crops so not only will they be able to export more food, their population will increase because they may need more slave labor to harvest and Australian can send all the refugees to NZ instead of  Manis Island and Naru.
There also is an extremely bright side to being considered a criminal and charged under S 474.17 of the Criminal Code for exposing systemic corrupt conduct and corruption  in Government Departments.
As  I found the Freedom of Information process   very difficult to t extract information from the Shonky ITSA/ AFSA, Commonwealth Ombudsman , Australian Public Service  Commission and  the Australian Federal police who have  their 2 Agents on the case ,Nuckhly Succar and Nathan Potter  trying to protect and coverup  Systemic  corrupt conduct and corruption in Government Agencies I  am very pleased and delighted that I now can subpoena the documents , by-passing the troublesome FOI Officers
Following is the Subpoena served on ITSA/ AFSA this morning.........